Webinar: Expert Panel on Portfolios & Assessment

The webinar “Expert panel on Portfolios & Assessment” discusses assessment, portfolios, and 21st-century learning with FreshGrade. Four presenters discuss their experience and ideas about FreshGrade.

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Kelli Vogstad is a vice principle who uses FreshGrade. Feel free to follow her blog               —-> Kellivogstad.com

In this webinar Kelly discusses how to best document learning on FreshGrade. She states that the documentation must show growth over time, provide reflection, and bring in the core competencies. To make learning visible on FreshGrade we must include the curriculum activity and task, but move beyond the picture of the worksheet or test. Our pictures need to show growth and learning. Further, FreshGrade should have two prominent voices: student and parent. Students should be encouraged to document what they have learned, what they still need to work on, and their plans to move forward. Additionally, parents voices should be included but their comments should move beyond praise.

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Damian Cooper is an assessment consultant who works to make assessment relevant for students and less work for teachers. Currently he is working on validating the use of observation and conversation as assessment tools.

Damian discusses the importance of a curriculum that focuses on know, do, and understand. He states that there is often an over reliance on factual knowledge and that we need to move toward observing students skills, competencies, and conceptual understanding. One way in which we can observe these areas is through FreshGrade. FreshGrade allows students to record information which we can view as evidence of learning on smartphones and tablets. This type of learning and assessment challenges the traditional marking approach but can be more beneficial as it allows students to gather their own evidence.

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Wanny Hersey is a superintendent in Northern California.

Wanna discusses how FreshGrade is utilized to document student achievement and growth at her project based learning school. The school that she describes utilizes focused learning goals. According to her, these goals and certain 21st century skills can be hard to demonstrate in a traditionally academic sense. In her opinion, FreshGrade is able to capture the entire learning experience of the students. Students are able to post about their goals online, which relates to metacognition. This also promotes engagement and conversations. Some challenges that Wanna describes includes the amount of devices available for uploading. For instance, you may need to take time to create a system for uploading if you only have access to a small number of devices. You also need to take time to train parents, teachers, and students about what strong evidence looks like. Further, some of the benefits discussed include the ability to document skills such as, collaboration and critical thinking. Additionally, because many teachers can have access to different student portfolios collaboration between teachers is common, and teachers can use FreshGrade as proof of their own professional growth.

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Karen Fadrum helps teachers understand how to utilize portfolios and assessment.

Karen mentioned that while using FreshGrade teachers need time and space, access to information, and a connection to the community. When shifting to using FreshGrade, teachers are learners and need to make FreshGrade work for them and their students. Some tools that can be utilized to support teachers includes: readily available technology, documentation tools for teachers and students, access to creative apps, and flexible learning spaces. Further, teachers should be given professional learning opportunities to share their FreshGrade experiences with each other.

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I won’t go over the q & a part of the video as it is twenty minutes long and I am ready for bed! But please watch the video for yourself! There is plenty of fabulous information located at the end of the video –> –> –> –> –> https://learning.freshgrade.com/courses/368996/lectures/5632299

Here is my cute certificate (extrinsic motivation at its finest)

certificate10

Thanks for reading,

Another webinar summary will be uploaded on the weekend!

Pacific School of Innovation and Inquiry

learningstorm.org

Last Friday my class visited the Pacific School of Innovation and Inquiry. Although I had never heard of this school before I was pleased to find out that it is a high school that personalizes education through a formal inquiry process where learners create projects and activities that take them through the curriculum on their own. Seeing this type of learning environment in person was very eyeopening for me.

Previously, I had loved watching the documentary “Most Likely to Succeed” in class. Although there are differences between HTH and PSII, both schools are doing some pretty different stuff compared to the traditional model of education. Plus, watching a movie barely compares to physically visiting a school. While walking around PSII I could feel the energy of the students and see how well that type of learning environment can work. Every single student was engaging with something throughout the hour that I was there. While talking to different students I felt like I was having a conversation with my own peers. I could see each student light up when talking about their current project. They were genuinely interested in the material that they were learning about and they loved talking about it. To me, it is without a doubt the future of education.

One thing that I would like to learn more about at PSII is assessment. Jeff Hopkins briefly described this process stating that students and teachers work together to discuss evaluation and grading. I got the sense that there is a lot of formative assessment during the year where teachers are working one-on-one with students, although there is still summative assessment where student learning needs to be compared to curriculum standards.

On another note, I really liked the integration of technologies like WordPress and Trello into the classroom, as I didn’t start using these technologies myself until taking this course. In fact, many of the students Trello accounts were much more creative and better organized than my own. It’s super awesome that students are getting acquainted with these sites as I believe that the internet provides a vast amount of entrepreneurial opportunities. If students are already starting to explore some of their ideas online they could have a successful business already built by the time that they graduate high school.

It was also interesting to hear how students are using virtual reality in the classroom in different ways. For instance, some students were using it for building, others gaming, and others art (I have mostly viewed virtual reality as a type of 3D gaming device, but it can be used for so much more!)

Although I can’t describe everything that I loved about this school, because there simply is too much, I encourage you to browse the schools website https://learningstorm.org/ and watch Jeff Hopkins TED talk about an inquiry approach to education.

 

 

Most Likely to Succeed Film

 

 

Last class we watched a film called “Most Likely to Succeed,” which is a documentary examining the history of education in the United States. This film revealed some of the shortcomings of the conventional education system in today’s increasingly technological world. Specifically, this film followed the problem and project based learning strategies used with students at High Tech High. Problem based learning requires higher order thinking skills that go beyond the level of understanding required by traditional classes that have clearly defined questions to be solved. The problems presented can often be too difficult to be solved individually and therefore require teamwork and collaboration between students. Additionally, project based learning allows students to increase their  autonomy by giving them control to create their own projects, although teachers still define parameters and completion dates. For instance, in the film all of the students in the school were working towards a project that would be displayed at the end of the year in front of other students, teachers, and parents. The project based approach to learning  challenged students to overcome problems (such as, working with others, defending points of view, dealing with frustration) in order to produce a project of substantial work.

Watching problem and project based learning was super interesting because I could see how students were being prepared for future careers. On film it looked like students gained confidence, increased their communication skills, learned how to critically think, and became more creative. This is awesome because schools today aren’t necessarily preparing children adequately for the workforce (in the way that education does not always lead to a job.) One of the reasons that this has occurred is due to an increase in technology that decreases traditional white-collar jobs. (I have seen this in action with friends and siblings and worry about it myself!) For a large majority of my own educational experiences I feel like I have only been taught how to memorize things effectively and take tests – without retaining a majority of the information presented to me.

Although I think that this new school is extremely forward thinking and fantastic, I can see how certain students might have problems with the way that things are done. For instance, there is lots of group projects and presentations which may make more introverted students feel burnt out. (It would be interesting to see if schools could be built and run according to learning styles or different temperaments? Why are we still stuck using one similar model of education when students are extremely diverse? Does more research need to be done? Are we too closed minded? Is it even possible?)

I hope that wasn’t too long for you..Thanks for reading!